This volume is most remarkable for its intellectual humility. Even as it shares insights from some of the most important scholars of decolonial thought and praxis, the volume – and the Forum that led to it – remains committed to diverse perspectives and genuine debate. In refusing ‘a perpetual search for mythical purity’, this volume offers readers a radical example of how to listen carefully and think openly about decoloniality.

Jeff Bale, University of Toronto, Canada

Anyone cracking under the pressure of neoliberalism would benefit from listening to the voices pushing boundaries in glocal epistemes in this eloquent volume. What is particularly special about this book is that it is not only about entanglements in the negotiation of both space and time in knowledge production in Applied Linguistics; it is in itself an entanglement.

Eric Enongene Ekembe, University of Yaounde 1, Cameroon

<p>The diverse, renowned collection of scholars in this book push the boundaries of knowledge by showing how colonial and imperial entanglements have shaped most of the analytical concepts that are used in Applied Linguistics from Global South perspectives. A focus on the ontologies of English complicates entanglements by revealing that scholarship has been entangled with monolingualism rather than multilingual, southern and decolonial projects.</p>

Sibusiso Cliff Ndlangamandla, University of South Africa

This book explores the ways in which language is understood in diverse contexts, and how linguistic theories – and the idea of language as an object – fail to represent a reality that is inherently multi- and trans-. The chapters tease out the way that an understanding of language as a social practice, and the central role of the speaker(s) and their repertoire, allows for a more nuanced interpretation of language in contexts ranging from English as an international ‘neutral’ language in research and teaching, to the importance of life trajectories and multilingualism in the development of theoretical perspectives. The book offers a glimpse of a decolonial linguistics that recognizes the importance of entanglement – between languages, between the North and South and between the personal and the theoretical.

Les mer

This book explores the ways in which language is understood, and how linguistic theories – and the idea of language as an object – fail to represent a reality that is inherently multi- and trans-. It offers a glimpse of a decolonial linguistics that centres entanglement – between the North and South and between the personal and the theoretical.

Les mer

Contributors

Cécile Vigouroux: Foreword 

Sinfree Makoni, Unyierie Idem, Edwin Dartey and Bassey Antia: Political and Linguistic Entanglements

Chapter 1. Sinfree Makoni and Henry Widdowson: In Conversation  

Chapter 2. Lynn Mario de Souza: Southernizing Linguistics

Chapter 3. Ofelia García, Ricardo Otheguy and Sinfree Makoni: In Conversation

Chapter 4. Susan Gal and Judith Irvine: Signs of Difference: A Conversation

Chapter 5. Joseph Errington: Living with Lingua Francas: English in Indonesia and Indonesian

Chapter 6. Stephanie Rudwick: Southernizing the Study of English as a Lingua Franca: In Conversation

Chapter 7. Ellen Hurst: African Youth Language Research: Stylects and Decolonial Practice                

Chapter 8. Rachel Wicaksono: Ontologies of English: In Applied Linguistics, TESOL and Beyond

Chapter 9. Mary Louise Pratt: Epilogue 

Chapter 10. Yecid Ortega: Palabras Finales

Index

Les mer

Testimony that we can do academia differently, more productively through cooperation and innovation

Produktdetaljer

ISBN
9781836681090
Publisert
2025-08-12
Utgiver
Channel View Publications Ltd
Vekt
470 gr
Høyde
245 mm
Bredde
174 mm
Dybde
15 mm
Aldersnivå
UP, 05
Språk
Product language
Engelsk
Format
Product format
Heftet
Antall sider
280

Biografisk notat

Sinfree Makoni is a Professor in Applied Linguistics and African Studies and Director of African Studies at Pennsylvania State University, USA. He holds Extraordinary Professorship, Visiting Professor and Researcher positions at several South African institutions: North-West University, Nelson Mandela University, University of the Western Cape and University of Zululand.

Unyierie Idem is a Professor in the Academic ESL Department, Holyoke Community College, USA.

Edwin Appah Dartey is a PhD candidate in the Department of Applied Linguistics and the African Studies Program at Pennsylvania State University, USA. His research interests include language policy and planning, multilingualism and southern epistemologies. Edwin's recent works have appeared in the Journal of English for Specific Purposes, Current Issues in Language Planning and the International Journal of Multilingualism. 

Bassey E. Antia is Professor of Applied Linguistics at the University of the Western Cape, South Africa. His teaching and/or research interests span multilingualism (in higher education), language policy, terminology and decolonial approaches to sociolinguistics. He is co-editor with Sinfree Makoni of Southernizing Sociolinguistics: Colonialism, Racism and Patriarchy in Language in the Global South (Routledge, 2023).